One of the most popular activities for Bruins fans every season is voting for the Seventh Player Award, which goes to the “player who performed beyond expectations.”

The award started as a promotional tool between the Bruins and a car dealership in the late 60s and has grown something of a cult following ever since. Fan voting will probably start soon, so keep your eyes and ears open as the season wears on.

Amazingly, when you look at the list of past winners, the fans more often than not have gotten the vote right (with a few exceptions).

Last year’s winner was rookie goaltender Tuukka Rask, who started the season expecting to be the back-up to defending Vezina Trophy winner Tim Thomas and wound up stealing the No. 1 job.

There are several candidates for this year’s award, including Thomas — who has already won the award twice (2006, 2007).

At first glance, you might think it preposterous that a goaltender who has won a Vezina and has been selected to his third All-Star Game would again be a candidate for an unsung hero-type award. But when you consider the specific wording of the award’s qualification — performed beyond expectations — you have to remember that when camp opened, Rask was The Man and Thomas was the guy many wanted to move out of town and off the Bruins’ salary cap.

Here we are, the fourth month of the regular season, and Thomas is putting up Dominik Hasek Hart Trophy-season numbers. He hasn’t just passed expectations, he has left them in the dust. If Thomas were to win, he’d be the first three-time winner in Bruins history.

Anyway, two forwards are probably going to challenge Thomas for the votes. Brad Marchand and Shawn Thornton were linemates for a large chunk of the first half of the season, but Marchand has since graduated to a higher line on the Bruins’ depth chart.

Still qualified as a rookie, Marchand has scored 10 goals and has used his peskiness for positives to draw many more penalties than he has taken this season. One of a number of forwards in the mix for one of the last roster spots during training camp, there conceivably weren’t any expectations on Marchand at the outset of the season.

Marchand/By S. Bradley

When the Bruins re-signed Thornton last summer, they knew they were retaining one of their vocal leaders, a guy who will fight anyone and one of only two Bruins players who has won the Stanley Cup. They probably didn’t know they were also bringing back a guy who was entering his goal-scoring prime. After scoring just one goal last season, Thornton has already surpassed his career high with seven this season. He hasn’t lost any of his edge and has engaged in some memorable fights, including the season-changing early-game bout with Eric Boulton Dec. 23.

On the back end, most of the Bruins’ defensemen have met expectations but not exceeded them. If Steve Kampfer gets to keep plying his trade in the NHL, however, he’ll be a candidate to get some votes. In 20 games, he has already posted eight points (4 goals) and been a revelation for Boston with his skating ability and vision on the ice.

Kampfer is up on emergency recall, so a healthy Bruins defense corps could force him back to the AHL. With the way he has played, you have to figure Boston is figuring on keeping Kampfer so he can continue his solid points pace.

With all these things considered, I ask the readers of TheBruinsBlog.net:

I went with Thornton. By definition of the award, the recipient should exceed expectations. For a guy in his early 30’s who is on the team as a role-player, he was expected to play tough, hit, and fight to bring energy to his team. Not only does he do these things game in and game out, but he has posted an NHL career high in goals and tied his high for points with plenty of season remaining, clearly surpassing expectations.
I really think Marchand is a great player who will only get better as he matures, but I think his performance is expected from him.

I agree that Campbell is being overlooked and also deserves some recognition. I voted Marchand but I would have had a tough decision had Campbell been on the list. Campbell was the throwaway trade to even up the salaries in the Horton trade, but I think more and more that Campbell was the better part of the trade.

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Campbell has been a vastly understated upgrade on the 4th line, and Thornton has had a greater year offensively than anyone could imagine. Kampfer has quickly stepped up as a dynamic two way defender, and Thomas has simply had an unbelievable Hart-worthy season. That being said, Marchand is my pick. He projected as a part-time contributor on the 4th line and has instead jumped into the offense and become a top penalty killer. IMO Marchy has made the most strides in his development this season, and seems to provide extra motivation for the rest of the B’s forwards when he’s in the lineup.

Right now my vote would go to Marchand. Every line he has played on seems to out work everyone else. The “energy line” is not the same when he’s not on it and I think (I don’t want to look up the stats) that Bergeron went on his tear when Marchand join his line. I think his linemates don’t want to let him down by not matching his compete level. He has a trait that is usually saved for the star players and that is he makes his teammates better and nobody expected that.

I voted for Marchand but there is another player to be considered who is not even listed: Gregory Campbell. He has been a big part of the reason for the 4th line’s success, and has made the 4th line get almost equal minutes to the B’s top lines.

Wow Very tough call! Thornton and Marchand have both played above expectations. I expected Kampfer to be good, and his stats are still to new this year. Thomas gets my vote. I didn’t expect this, especially after his sub par year last year along with Rask’s great season. And he has just been head and shoulders above every goalie in the league. on a team were offense (minus the last 5 games) has been hard to come by, he is carrying the team!!!

All these guys are doing amazing, but I would go with Thornton for sure. We all know he is there to play the “goon” role, but he is putting up points, has great hands, and he plays the role of captain without actually being one. When Recchi retires, it’ll be an insult if Thornton doesn’t get an “A” on his sweater.

tough call. I went with Kampfer over Marchand because I had lower knowledge of and expectations for Kampfer at the start of training camp. they are both very deserving of this type of recognition. this is not Thornton’s year, mostly due to the stiff competition for this title.